Steve wrote:Not a fan of the supa-ray. The flashing is way to sharp on the bottom rim and it won't hold turnovers very well. Going to skip it off the road some and report back later.

The flashing on the KC's are a crazy as well, I just put both hands on one and twist it back and forth in the carpet so the friction rubs the flashing off.** Rather do that than scrape it up on stone of sort..

The KC doesn't fade out much earlier and harder than the SS -somewhat of a surprise. The difference is enough in weaving through obstacles though. New ones with flash. Three rounds at Meilahti and the KC lost an inch of the flash. It peeled off like no other flash i've encountered.

Flat shots need running on the center line of the tee and planting each step on the center line. Anhyzer needs running from rear right to front left with the plant step hitting the ground to the left of the line you're running on. Hyzer is the mirror of that.

Just picked up a Super Ray. It had some very sharp flashing, and I removed it with sand paper. This is a very good feeling disc that fits nicely between my new roc and beat roc. It is stable, and fades nicely at the end. Different than the DX Stingray I threw for a while, but I think that it will be a great hyzer-flipper, with distance potential. It is long and holds some nice lines. Rocs are my bread and butter mids, but the stingray is a special disc that can fly low, high, fast and slow.

The Super Ray(once deflashed), is a very nice disc. Very straight with minimal fade out to about 300. When throwing out to 330, it holds a very nice left to right flight pattern all the way to the ground. The one thing that caught me off guard a little was it's speed...a little slower than I was expecting.

picked up a ss and i have to say this is a sweet disc. fially found a disc to replace my x storms. been looking for some thing to fill the real smooth dead nuts straight shot that the storm did so well.

Mountain dwelllers are gonna hate me for this but the SS is better than the QMS at sea level. I would imagine the QMS at altitude flies about the same as the SS does at sea level. The SS is a little more HSS but does turn at speed too. I haven't done a comparison now that my D has changed so i can't say for sure about relative distances. I think the SS is at least as long if not a little longer. Both glide well and do a small fade in the end.

Flat shots need running on the center line of the tee and planting each step on the center line. Anhyzer needs running from rear right to front left with the plant step hitting the ground to the left of the line you're running on. Hyzer is the mirror of that.